How Traders and Investors Should Play This Market Investment U
Post on: 29 Март, 2015 No Comment

by Alexander Green. Chief Investment Strategist, The Oxford Club Monday, August 8, 2011 Wisdom of Wealth
by Alexander Green. Investment U’s Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, August 8, 2011: Issue #1573
You often read in the financial press that stock market investors should do this or short-term traders should do that. But which one are you and what should you be doing now?
Here are my quick and dirty definitions, followed by a few thoughts about how each ought to approach today’s wild and wooly financial markets.
For the long-term stock investor, the current sell-off is almost certainly a gift from Fortune. I know, no one you know sees it that way, but look back through history. You’ll find that virtually every widespread market sell-off was a buying opportunity.
Yes, the market can go lower in the short term. (That’s always the case, incidentally.) But over the last 40 years, the S&P 500 has seen 25 corrections of 10 percent during a bull market. In only nine of them did the losses grow to 20 percent or more. Despite all the naysayers, a further sell-off is hardly assured.
One of the Few Reliable Rules of Investing
Still, you should only nibble at great stocks right now, not throw money at them in wild abandon. (Although I’ll bet that’s not your instinct right now, anyway.) One of the few reliable rules of investing is that perceived risk and actual risk are inversely related: The more dangerous the market feels, the more likely it is to produce generous returns in the years ahead.
So long-term investors gradually shift some money out of assets like bonds that have appreciated sharply and move them into stocks which have depreciated sharply. The fact that this feels like the wrong thing to do is, paradoxically, just the confirmation you need. (You need only recall the market meltdown two and a half years ago to see what I mean.)
Short-term traders need to take a slightly different approach, however. If you’ve been using our recommended trailing stops. you almost certainly have been building cash the last few weeks as you protected profits and preserved capital.
Don’t be in any rush to put this cash back to work. To take advantage of a crisis, you don’t have to be the first one to the fire. Pick your spots and trade judiciously. (One good strategy is to buy the same stocks that corporate insiders are currently loading up on.)
Don’t Risk Missing a Significant Rebound
Despite the stormy weather, you should cast a few lines right now. It may be tempting to simply wait until things “settle down” but then you run the risk of missing a significant rebound.